LIFE’s final issue as a weekly magazine came out in December 1972, just three months before the first mobile phone call was transmitted from a New York City street corner on April 3, 1973. And perhaps that’s for the best—those plastic bricks would have looked a tad out of place in an Eisenstaedt shot of Sophia Loren. But although the Motorola DynaTAC never graced the magazine’s pages, LIFE’s subjects, it seemed, were always on the phone. Today we may use our phones to avoid awkward elevator conversations, but the images of world leaders and the Hollywood elite with receivers to their ears connote men and women in control, calling (quite literally) the shots.
Liz Ronk, who edited this gallery, is the Photo Editor for LIFE.com. Follow her on Twitter at @LizabethRonk.
LIFE Watches TV: Classic Photos of People and Their Television Sets
Radio Corporation of America (RCA) executives watch a brand new invention called television, their New York offices before introducing the product to the public, 1939.Carl Mydans—The LIFE Picture Collection/Getty ImagesWriter Russell Finch enjoys a smoke, a bath and a TV show in 1948George Skadding—The LIFE Picture Collection/Getty ImagesMen gather to watch TV through a store window in Pennsylvania in 1948.Ralph Morse—The LIFE Picture Collection/Getty ImagesA boy watches TV in an appliance store window in 1948.Ralph Morse—The LIFE Picture Collection/Getty ImagesSisters at St. Vincent's Hospital in Erie, Penn., watch a program on a new local TV station, 1949.Ralph Morse—The LIFE Picture Collection/Getty ImagesWatching a Western on TV in 1950.Alfred Eisenstaedt—The LIFE Picture Collection/Getty ImagesA group of swimmers at an indoor pool watch the Russian ambassador to the United Nations, Jacob Malik, filibustering in the UN Security Council in 1950.George Skadding—The LIFE Picture Collection/Getty ImagesGrade school kids in Minneapolis watch a video "classroom lesson" on TV while the city's public schools are on strike in 1951.Francis Miller—The LIFE Picture Collection/Getty ImagesA rapt audience in a Chicago bar watches the 1952 World Series between the Dodgers and Yankees. (The Yankees won.)Francis Miller—The LIFE Picture Collection/Getty ImagesSix-year-old girls use a "Winky Dink" drawing kit on their home TV screen as they watch the kids' program, 1953. The show, which aired for four years in the 1950s, has been cited as "the first interactive TV show," especially in light of its "magic drawing screen" — a piece of plastic that stuck to the TV screen, and on which kids (and, no doubt, some adults) would trace the action on the screen.Walter Sanders—The LIFE Picture Collection/Getty ImagesA performing chimpanzee named Zippy watches TV in 1955.Michael Rougier—The LIFE Picture Collection/Getty ImagesAn adopted Korean war orphan, Kang Koo Ri, watches television in his new home in Los Angeles in 1956.Allan Grant—The LIFE Picture Collection/Getty ImagesMilwaukee fans watch the 1957 World Series, when their Braves beat the Yankees in seven, behind three complete-game victories by the gutsy Lew Burdette.Francis Miller—The LIFE Picture Collection/Getty ImagesA railroad worker's family watches TV in a trailer at a camp for Southern Pacific employees in Utah in 1957.Frank Scherschel—The LIFE Picture Collection/Getty ImagesAn awe-struck baseball fan is seized with utter delight as he watches the Braves win their first and only World Series while based in Milwaukee in 1957.Francis Miller—The LIFE Picture Collection/Getty ImagesA traveling businessman watches TV in a hotel room in 1958.Nat Farbman—The LIFE Picture Collection/Getty ImagesTenant farmer Thomas B. Knox and his family watch Ed Sullivan and ventriloquist Rickie Layne on The Ed Sullivan Show in 1958.Ed Clark—The LIFE Picture Collection/Getty ImagesPicketing workers watch TV in a tent outside the gates of a U.S. Steel plant in Gary, Indiana, during a strike in 1959.Francis Miller—The LIFE Picture Collection/Getty ImagesVice President Richard Nixon and his wife, Pat, watch the 1960 GOP convention in Chicago from their hotel suite.Hank Walker—The LIFE Picture Collection/Getty ImagesThe Kim Sisters — a Korean-born singing trio who had some success in the U.S. in the 1960s — watch television in Chicago in 1960.Robert W. Kelley—The LIFE Picture Collection/Getty ImagesEventual VP candidate Lyndon Johnson watches TV during the 1960 Democratic National Convention in Los Angeles.Thomas D. McAvoy—The LIFE Picture Collection/Getty ImagesA "Three-Eyed TV Monster" created by Ulises Sanabria which permits simultaneous two- and three-screen viewing, 1961.Francis Miller—The LIFE Picture Collection/Getty ImagesAstronaut Scott Carpenter's wife, Rene, and son, Marc, watch his 1962 orbital flight on TV. Carpenter's was NASA's second manned orbital flight, after John Glenn's, and lasted nearly five hours.Ralph Morse—The LIFE Picture Collection/Getty ImagesDie-hard New York Giants fans watch the 1962 NFL championship game against the Packers outside a Connecticut motel, beyond the range of the NYC-area TV blackout, December 1962. Green Bay won, 16-7.John Loengard—The LIFE Picture Collection/Getty ImagesA crowd watches John F. Kennedy address the nation during the Cuban Missile Crisis, October 1962.Ralph Crane—The LIFE Picture Collection/Getty ImagesFrank Sinatra watches his son, Frank Jr., 21, emcee a TV show, 1964.
John Dominis—The LIFE Picture Collection/Getty ImagesDifferent CATV (Community Antenna Television) stations available to subscribers in Elmira, New York, in 1966.Arthur Schatz —The LIFE Picture Collection/Getty ImagesActress Diahann Carroll and journalist David Frost watch themselves on separate talk shows. Carroll and Frost were engaged for a while, but never married.Bill Ray—The LIFE Picture Collection/Getty ImagesCarole Lombard on the phone, 1938.Alfred Eisenstaedt—The LIFE Picture Collection/Getty ImagesBette Davis on the phone, 1938.Alfred Eisenstaedt—The LIFE Picture Collection/Getty ImagesMickey Rooney on the phone, 1939.Peter Stackpole—The LIFE Picture Collection/Getty ImagesEleanor Roosevelt on the phone, 1940.David E. Scherman—The LIFE Picture Collection/Getty ImagesJoan Bennett on the phone, 1940.Peter Stackpole—The LIFE Picture Collection/Getty ImagesGreer Garson on the phone, 1943.Peter Stackpole—The LIFE Picture Collection/Getty ImagesBing Crosby on the phone, 1944.John Florea—The LIFE Picture Collection/Getty ImagesDanny Kaye on the phone, 1945.Peter Stackpole—The LIFE Picture Collection/Getty ImagesJimmy Stewart on the phone, 1945.Peter Stackpole—The LIFE Picture Collection/Getty ImagesIrving Berlin on the phone, 1946.Cornell Capa—The LIFE Picture Collection/Getty Images June Lockhart on the phone, 1947.Peter Stackpole—The LIFE Picture Collection/Getty ImagesRocky Graziano on the phone, 1947.Ralph Morse—The LIFE Picture Collection/Getty ImagesMarilyn Monroe on the phone, 1951.Bob Landry—The LIFE Picture Collection/Getty ImagesHenry Fonda on the phone, 1951.W. Eugene Smith—The LIFE Picture Collection/Getty ImagesLyndon Johnson on the phone, 1953.Mark Kauffman—The LIFE Picture Collection/Getty ImagesJayne Mansfield on the phone, 1956.Peter Stackpole—The LIFE Picture Collection/Getty ImagesRobert F. Kennedy on the phone, 1957.Paul Schutzer—The LIFE Picture Collection/Getty ImagesDick Clark on the phone, 1958.Robert W. Kelley—The LIFE Picture Collection/Getty ImagesMartin Luther King on the phone, 1958.Grey Villet—The LIFE Picture Collection/Getty ImagesAnne Bancroft on the phone, 1958.Alfred Eisenstaedt—The LIFE Picture Collection/Getty ImagesJimmy Hoffa on the phone, 1958.Hank Walker—The LIFE Picture Collection/Getty ImagesJackie Kennedy and Caroline Kennedy on the phone, 1960.Alfred Eisenstaedt—The LIFE Picture Collection/Getty ImagesJohn F. Kennedy on the phone, 1961.Art Rickerby—The LIFE Picture Collection/Getty ImagesBob Hope on the phone, 1962.Allan Grant—The LIFE Picture Collection/Getty ImagesSteve McQueen on the phone, 1963.John Dominis—The LIFE Picture Collection/Getty ImagesSophia Loren on the phone, 1964.Alfred Eisenstaedt—The LIFE Picture Collection/Getty ImagesTed Kennedy on the phone, 1965.Leonard McCombe—The LIFE Picture Collection/Getty ImagesFrank Sinatra on the phone, 1965.John Dominis—The LIFE Picture Collection/Getty ImagesHubert M. Humphrey on the phone, 1965.Stan Wayman—The LIFE Picture Collection/Getty ImagesDustin Hoffman on the phone, 1969.John Dominis—The LIFE Picture Collection/Getty ImagesJane Fonda on the phone, 1971.Bill Ray—The LIFE Picture Collection/Getty ImagesMuhammad Ali on the phone, 1971.John Shearer—The LIFE Picture Collection/Getty ImagesRobert Redford on the phone, 1971.John Dominis—The LIFE Picture Collection/Getty ImagesRobert Stephens on the phone, 1971.John Olson—The LIFE Picture Collection/Getty ImagesWarren Beatty on the phone, 1972.Ralph Morse—The LIFE Picture Collection/Getty Images